OpenBSD 4.7 Released
An anonymous reader writes "The release of OpenBSD 4.7 was announced today. Included in this release are support for more wireless cards, the loongson platform, pf improvements, many midlayer filesystem improvements including a new dynamic buffer cache, dynamic VFS name cache rewrite and NFS client stability fixes, routing daemon improvements including the new MPLS label distribution protocol daemon (ldpd) and over 5,800 packages. Please help support the project by ordering your copy today!"
The insecurity of OpenBSD
A criticism of the OpenBSD security philosophy is performed, along with an examination of the claims made regarding the project. In particular their rejection of any advanced access control framework is examined. A well researched and well written article, followed by over 200 comments that are also worth reading.
Does anyone know if ldpd is available in Linux also? Do you need OpenBSD to support VRF's?
Now go RTFA before you post.
Darn, FAILED.
Have you heard about SoylentNews?
I just downloaded the old version 2 days ago!
On a serious note; Can a BSD client read/write/use a Debian NFS share?
"The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." ~Plato (427-347 BC)
If I can't see examples of OpenBSD running Gnome with transparent Conky over a red Lamborghini Murcielago wallpaper and maybe some cascading green character columns like the Matrix, I'm going back to Ubuntu.
Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
Yeah, I use OpenBSD. My firewall's named linksys and the SSID is default, both for sheer entertainment value. OpenBSD like anything else has its flaws: namely a insular and hostile user community and theocratic leader with a vision. On the other hand it's people like that who get things done.
It would be nice to do more with OpenBSD than I can now, but last I checked ports didn't have the latest asterisk, getting the latest Java running is a pita, the latest Apache has an incompatible license or something, ZFS will never be supported, etc, etc, etc. But staying up with the latest software isn't really a design goal for Theo & crew. It's sort of the PVP UNIX - no care bears welcome. Their targeted approach to security over features makes it the best OS out there for targeted uses, but who knows if they'll make it to 5.7 - decreasing relevance and due to narrowing mainstream software support definitely also narrows interest.
Regardless, congrats on another great release.
Good for OpenBSD for supporting a computer architecture that is fully open and documented. Oh, the irony that it hails from communist China! And, eee-gads! It looks like Theo and Richard both like it! http://www.osnews.com/story/22674/China_s_Loongson_Processor_Effort
When it came to things like OSPF, BGP, routing, filtering (pf failover) and that sort of networking things, Linux hasn't been the best (though queuing and protocols have had some innovations and dev work).
Anyone have an opinion on this?
For example, Zebra was basically abandoned (it sucked anyway), which now became quagga -- if I wanted a Cisco, I'd get a Cisco. Stop trying to make it a damn emulator.
BGP? I don't even know if there is anything.
iptables is cool, but it just doesn't have failover like pf has (I want people with real-word experience, don't tell me "it's supported" when it's crap.)
Please be sure to use a mirror (or torrent) rather than overloading the main site.
I started using OpenBSD at version 2.7 after a few years using various versions of Redhat linux and Mandrake.
I was hooked right away.. It was a lot of things. Maybe the first was the really easy installation process... In my opinion it still might be the simplest out there. There is the well written man pages.. And the simple 'full' installation. It was easy to understand where everything was and it mostly stayed that way from release to release. The config files seemed easy to read and the firewall was really snazzy!
They do some good work! I enjoy using it, even if all I am really doing is small scale hobby work.
Frankly zebra, openbgpd and this mpls daemon are pretty silly. Designed for academia I guess, nobody serious uses these after their track record of instability.
Ogre Wedding Planners llc.
This is clearly the unbiased opinion (*chortle*) of Ballmer's favorite cock jockey. Nothing to see here fucks but the usual sopssa FUD.
Cool story, brah.
Check that user's name a bit more carefully. :)
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law
why has no one tagged the article "Beastie?"
The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
Used to be that the Plaid Tongued Devils provided a new song for every release - this is the first song I've seen by someone else.
For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
Quagga has made amazing strides. We've been using it where I work (small local ISP) for several years. We got rid of our main router about 2 years ago (Cisco 7600) and went with it due to a number of factors. I administrate a /20 over it with ~40 remote locations, ~200 servers, PtP VPN tunnels, and around ~100 road warrior VPN tunnels and it hasn't crashed on me yet. The servers uptime is 547 days right now (updates if I recall). We only have 4 peering lines, but unless our providers have had issues we haven't had any.
Oh and it's actually running virtualized in an HA cluster of Xenservers, if it dies, at the most there's ~5-10ms of downtime. Load average on the machine is 0.00,0.00,0.00. Is it ready for production? I can't say for all shops, but for our modest outfit it does amazing well.
But yea, Zebra did suck. And no iptables doesn't do complete failover. Though it would be super nice, it's a feature that I could live without. My clients can generally live with a dropped connection every year or two, though I'm well aware some shops cannot.
Who cares, you should be using a Cisco router.
The things that are pioneered by OpenBSD, often make their way to everywhere else.
So, ahem, it IS invented in OpenBSD.
What's a functional network appliance type device that supports OpenBSD through and through to load up OpenBSD 4.7 on?
It's entirely possible that a piece of hardware you buy contains portions of *BSD code.
So maybe at some point you will use it, if you don't already, just not how you'd expect.
Does it support UTF-8 out-of-the-box yet?
What exactly does linux networking have to do with openbsd? Are we new to this system administration stuff?
IMHO if someone has problem with OpenBSD community/leader, he should hang at Mac community/websites/mags and especially IRC channels for a while.
I also think OpenBSD theocratic leader and hostile community could be the reason why OpenBSD has its unique and prestigious position today... We all heard how many users got banned for questioning inclusion of Mono to a "user friendly" Linux OS distro which has democratic leadership right?
This will be the year of OpenBSD on the desktop.
NFS still doesn't effing work right? Wow.
+++OK ATH
Risking to be modded troll:
1. No proper ACPI support. This is what kept me away from OpenBSD already in 2004 and still I can not put my laptop to sleep
2. Only secure if you have time to compile by yourself... no binary updates!!
Otherwise i really like OpenBSD and I would switch at any moment!
Uhm... Yeah.
Why use a cheap arm toaster that can be set up in 5 minutes when you can give CISCO a few thousand dollars for a piece of shit?
BTW, if you are using a Linux that lets you install software that is more up-to-date that OpenBSD current repositories(Which one Crashora or Crashuntu?) I doubt you cant get over 10 hours of uptime. Nowhere near the 3 months you would need to properly configure SELinux.
But then, I guess you are only looking down on the "sour" grapes. You are not allowed to replace a $10000 router with a $100 redundant array of consumer hardware because it would make your boss look bad.
Can you really be this dense? Or have I just been trolled?
In case you're serious: your shiny Steve-spunk has nothing to do with the topic being discussed. It is about a security feature called Mandatory Access Control. So nobody was dissing your retarded macbook (although it should be). You can now safely roll down your black turtle neck and show your white ear buds.
Christ-on-a-stick, the attention whoring of mac heads never ceases to amaze...
URL Shorteners - the herpes of the web
Uhm... Yeah.
Why use a cheap arm toaster that can be set up in 5 minutes when you can give CISCO a few thousand dollars for a piece of shit?
Because that toaster doesn't provide real support and next-day RMA service. You might work in a small shop, but for people who run multiple datacenters, 100s or 1000s of network devices, and whose jobs rely on uptime this is a no-brainer. I'll take the appliance with the service guarantee, replacements, and track record over a few Dells with *nix running on them.
You are not allowed to replace a $10000 router with a $100 redundant array of consumer hardware because it would make your boss look bad.
I can see why you posted AC. You're out of your depth. Cisco may churn out some real crapware ancillary platforms sometimes, but when it comes to core routing and switching on the big chassis, they're pretty damned reliable.
There's rumours that iptables might be going away eventually for this instead.
Now I'll admit I've never used *BSD, but even I can see iptables is *fucking awful* for anything more than the most basic IP/port matching. Hopefully this'll happen sooner rather than later.
vyatta